Am. H.B. 503

127th General Assembly

(As Passed by the House)

 

Reps.      Peterson and Letson, Evans, Bacon, Boyd, Yuko, Stebelton, R. Hagan, B. Williams, Beatty, Raussen, Huffman, Fende, Mecklenborg, Heard, Celeste, Brown, Strahorn, J. Otterman, Budish, Combs, DeBose, DeGeeter, Domenick, Dyer, Foley, Gerberry, Harwood, Heydinger, Hughes, Luckie, Mallory, Oelslager, Patton, Schneider, D. Stewart, White, Yates 

BILL SUMMARY

·        Changes the education requirements for admission to the psychologist licensure examination, but excepts from the new requirements applicants who enroll not later than 60 days after the bill's effective date in programs that meet existing requirements.

·        Removes the requirement that the State Board of Psychology maintain a record of each degree program it recognizes as acceptable for fulfilling the educational requirements, but requires the Board to adopt rules for determining whether a degree is equivalent to a degree from an institution in the United States.

·        Replaces the requirement that at least one of the two years of supervised professional experience needed for admission to the psychologist licensure examination be completed on a postdoctoral basis with a requirement that the year be a predoctoral internship and applies this requirement to licensed clinical psychologists in the laws governing hospitalization of mentally ill persons.

CONTENT AND OPERATION

Current requirements for admission to psychologist licensure examination

(R.C. 4732.10)

To be admitted to the examination for a psychologist license, an applicant must meet a number of requirements including the following:

(1)  Have received from an accredited or recognized educational institution an earned doctoral degree in psychology, school psychology, or a doctoral degree deemed equivalent by the State Board of Psychology.  (The Psychology Board is required to maintain a record of each specific degree program it recognizes as acceptable for fulfilling the educational requirements.)

(2)  Have had at least two years of supervised professional experience in psychological work of a type satisfactory to the Psychology Board, at least one year of which is postdoctoral.

New requirements

The bill modifies the degree requirement by specifying the acceptable education or practical experience.  An applicant must meet one of the following requirements:

·        Have received an earned doctoral degree from an institution accredited or recognized by a national or regional accrediting agency and a program accredited by the American Psychological Association (Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation), the Accreditation Office of the Canadian Psychological Association, a program listed by the Association of State and Provincial Psychology Boards/National Register Designation Committee, or the National Association of School Psychologists;

·        Have received a degree from an academic institution outside of the United States or Canada determined by the Psychology Board to be equivalent to a doctoral degree in psychology from a program described above;

·        Held a psychologist license, certificate, or registration required for practice in another United States or Canadian jurisdiction for a minimum of ten years and meet educational, experience, and professional requirements established by the Psychology Board.

The bill permits an applicant who, up to 60 days after the bill's effective date, is enrolled in a program that meets the educational requirements of current law to qualify under current requirements rather than the new ones.  The applicant must, however, earn a doctoral degree in psychology or school psychology, or a doctoral degree deemed equivalent by the Psychology Board no later than eight years after the bill's effective date.  The bill thereby grandfathers applicants who are in or about to start degree programs when the bill takes effect.

The bill also removes the requirement that the Psychology Board maintain a record of each specific degree program that it recognizes as acceptable for fulfilling the educational requirements.  It requires instead that the Board adopt rules for determining whether a degree is equivalent to a degree in psychology from an institution in the United States.

The bill modifies the supervised-experience requirement by instead requiring that at least one year of the minimum two years of supervised professional experience be a predoctoral internship.

"Licensed clinical psychologist" in mental health law

(R.C. 5122.01)

For purposes of current laws governing the hospitalization of mentally ill individuals and the Ohio Department of Mental Health, "licensed clinical psychologist" is defined as a person who holds a current valid psychologist license and meets certain requirements.  One of which is that the psychologist have a minimum of two years' supervised, full-time professional experience, at least one year of which is postdoctoral, in clinical psychological work diagnosing and treating problems of mental illness or mental retardation.  As with requirements for admission to the psychologist examination, the bill changes the requirement that one year of the supervised experience be postdoctoral to a requirement that at least one year be a predoctoral internship.

HISTORY

ACTION

DATE

 

 

Introduced

03-11-08

Reported, H. Health

05-08-08

Passed House (95-0)

05-29-08

 

 

 

H0503-PH-127.doc/jc